John

Authored Comments

The distribution that meets my router's needs is OpenWRT. My desktop is a mixture of curiosity and benchmarking; I'm playing with Fedora 18 Alpha, Oracle R5U8, OpenIndiana 151a r7, and FreeBSD 9. However with the constant news about Valve, I'm posting this from Ubuntu 12.04. viva libre

In the battle between Gnome 3 vs Gnome 2 vs change, Gnome 3 wins.

For those of you that have grandparents that recently started using a computer, you'd know that one of the most challenging things to do is click on small things. The hand and arm work together to form a gripping motion, so click & drag happens when just click is wanted. Gnome 3 knows this, Gnome 2 doesn't.

Focusing on the article, change also allows you to apply data to decide if your assumptions were wrong. For instance, the lack of a persistent window pager was frustrating, but a window pager makes multiple workspaces optional. Now multiple workspaces is how windows get managed, allowing the taskbar window list to go.

I wasn't under the 'why did they do this to me' perception, but rather the 'finally, a desktop environment that uses my graphics capability and knowledge from the Sugar UI'. If it's about the users, I think Gnome 3 is a win. If it's about the future of the Linux desktop, I think Gnome 3 is a win there too. If it's about nostalgia, Gnome 3 doesn't care.